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Tiki 05-01-2009 06:16 PM

My long-lost brother
 
I decided to put this here because it is about family relationships; hopefully this is a good place for it.

My mom emailed me today to tell me that she has made contact with my older brother, who she gave up for adoption at birth. He's ten years older than I am, which means my mom was 19 when she had him.

She told me about the existence of my brother about two years ago, when she started looking for him. Meanwhile, my brother had decided to seek her out, and his parents gave him documents with my mom's name on them. He found a phone number for her, but the number was disconnected, so it took another year for him to find her.

He wants to meet me and my sister who lives nearby; he's looked us up online and is just waiting for the go-ahead from my mom to contact us. He's just down in Corvallis, and I've even looked at his Myspace page... I'm kind of tripped out!

Also anxious, because my mom was, honestly, not the greatest mom and my sister is really angry at her, and I'm worried about this guy (my brother!) being disappointed.

Anyway. Still processing.

Stormieweather 05-01-2009 07:22 PM

Leave your expectations behind and simply enjoy who he is.

I found my birth mother and two half sisters a few years ago. We didn't become super close (I only spoke to my sisters once), but my mother and I got to talk and spend some time together before she died last year. I wouldn't have missed it for anything.

Clodfobble 05-01-2009 07:54 PM

Two of my cousins are half-brothers (my one uncle had two kids,) and while neither was given up for adoption, the first one stayed with his mother while my uncle completely severed ties and eventually started his second family. It wasn't until after the uncle died that the two cousins were made aware of each other's existence, and finally got to meet.

They had more in common than they'd ever thought possible, and are now even closer than most brothers who grew up together. What I'm saying is, let your brother's relationship with your mom be what it is, and his relationship with you be its own thing. Don't let one affect the other, if you don't want to.

richlevy 05-01-2009 07:54 PM

I met my birth family a few years ago and I think overall it was a very positive experience. In my case I was the one who found my relatives through a genealogy site.

Even if nothing develops, the closure is still there.

Good luck.

Yznhymr 05-01-2009 08:54 PM

My parents abandoned me when I was 8. Recently I tried to used an Indian tracker to locate them. By chance, my mom calls me when she sees me on TV. I am finally reunited and I am extremely dissapointed. They were just very selfish and didn't really care about me for me. So I turned my back and never looked back. I guess what I learned was home is where you make it. No reason to pine away for a past that I can't change. I've got a great wife, friends and a bitchin car ('67 Plymouth convertible). What else do I need?

xoxoxoBruce 05-01-2009 11:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Yznhymr (Post 562006)
I've got a great wife, friends and a bitchin car ('67 Plymouth convertible). What else do I need?

70hp per liter? :haha:

Tiki 05-02-2009 02:34 AM

I looked at my brother's Myspace... I was really tempted to friend him, but then I thought that might be a little intense if I didn't make some kind of other contact first, but basically I got a little sense for who he is and I really liked him. :) He's middle-aged, kinda smart, kinda nerdy, and maybe I'm projecting but I got a sense of kinship from it. More tomorrow.

DanaC 05-02-2009 03:14 AM

Quote:

What I'm saying is, let your brother's relationship with your mom be what it is, and his relationship with you be its own thing. Don't let one affect the other, if you don't want to.
Worth repeating *smiles*

Hope it goes well Tiki. Keep us posted. Speaking as a sister, having a brother in your life rocks :P

My outer family had a similar kind of experience recently. A few years ago a long lost brother contacted my relative (my dad's cousin, I don't really know her that well. Only met her at dad's funeral, but knew of through family grapevine). When the family still lived in India, the boy, then 14 years old, was kicked out by his mum (my great-aunt). A couple of years later, the boy having left and not been seen since, the family left India.

Several decades later, my (2nd) cousin, whom I recently met at dad's funeral, discovered she had a brother (she'd been born after they left India) by chance, overhearing a conversation between her older sisters. When she asked her mum about him, she was told to forget about him, because he's "a bad lot". Poor bloody kid. A bad lot at 14?

Anyway. 50 years after he'd been kicked out of the family home in india, he found his sister. He'd been in England for many years by then. With his own family. He and his sister are still in contact.

TheMercenary 05-02-2009 07:45 AM

I think it is cool Tiki. You all are adults now. Go for it and let the chips fall where they may. You make your relationships with each other now, not with or because of what you mom wants.

Perry Winkle 05-03-2009 05:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Yznhymr (Post 562006)
My parents abandoned me when I was 8. Recently I tried to used an Indian tracker to locate them. By chance, my mom calls me when she sees me on TV. I am finally reunited and I am extremely dissapointed. They were just very selfish and didn't really care about me for me. So I turned my back and never looked back. I guess what I learned was home is where you make it. No reason to pine away for a past that I can't change. I've got a great wife, friends and a bitchin car ('67 Plymouth convertible). What else do I need?

Is that you Joe?

Agent-G 05-06-2009 04:44 AM

Im 25, and found out at age 18 that the man I grew up with as a father was not my biological father. I met my biological father a few months later.

It is honestly, a very strange experience. Supposeably, my mom kept me from him because he was still in the party scene while she was trying to get out.

For me, it did not make much difference. My dad who raised me never treated me any different than my brothers or sister who were only half related to me, and if anything he treated me better.
I met my biological father and stayed with him for awhile. I think he was searching for a family. He has since had a family of his own, two kids, two step kids and a wife, and it seems like he doesnt really have a need for me anymore.

Honestly, it was all kinda pointless to me. I was the one who would call him, until I said fuck it, there is no point. He has not called in over 3 years, I am not any better for knowing about him. I dunno.

It is a strange experience, I can tell you that though. Living 18 years thinking one thing, and BAM, here is something to blow your mind.

DanaC 05-06-2009 06:16 PM

God, that must have been so weird.

Yznhymr 05-07-2009 08:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Perry Winkle (Post 562556)
Is that you Joe?

Hell yea! Is that you, Zander?????

http://thm-a01.yimg.com/image/040b3b070cd9d998

Cicero 05-07-2009 11:02 PM

I just met a couple of my brothers. It was a rewarding experience. :)

DanaC 05-08-2009 06:32 AM

I can't imagine suddenly finding something like that out. My identity is so locked in with my immediate family, it'd destabilise me greatly I think.


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